527 research outputs found
Spectrophotometric Redshifts. A New Approach to the Reduction of Noisy Spectra and its Application to GRB090423
We have developed a new method, close in philosophy to the photometric
redshift technique, which can be applied to spectral data of very low
signal-to-noise ratio. Using it we intend to measure redshifts while minimising
the dangers posed by the usual extraction techniques. GRB afterglows have
generally very simple optical spectra over which the separate effects of
absorption and reddening in the GRB host, the intergalactic medium, and our own
Galaxy are superimposed. We model all these effects over a series of template
afterglow spectra to produce a set of clean spectra that reproduce what would
reach our telescope. We also model carefully the effects of the
telescope-spectrograph combination and the properties of noise in the data,
which are then applied on the template spectra. The final templates are
compared to the two-dimensional spectral data, and the basic parameters
(redshift, spectral index, Hydrogen absorption column) are estimated using
statistical tools. We show how our method works by applying it to our data of
the NIR afterglow of GRB090423. At z ~ 8.2, this was the most distant object
ever observed. We use the spectrum taken by our team with the Telescopio
Nazionale Galileo to derive the GRB redshift and its intrinsic neutral Hydrogen
column density. Our best fit yields z=8.4^+0.05/-0.03 and N(HI)<5x10^20 cm^-2,
but with a highly non-Gaussian uncertainty including the redshift range z [6.7,
8.5] at the 2-sigma confidence level. Our method will be useful to maximise the
recovered information from low-quality spectra, particularly when the set of
possible spectra is limited or easily parameterisable while at the same time
ensuring an adequate confidence analysis.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
The Swift X-ray Telescope Cluster Survey II. X-ray spectral analysis
(Abridged) We present a spectral analysis of a new, flux-limited sample of 72
X-ray selected clusters of galaxies identified with the X-ray Telescope (XRT)
on board the Swift satellite down to a flux limit of ~10-14 erg/s/cm2 (SWXCS,
Tundo et al. 2012). We carry out a detailed X-ray spectral analysis with the
twofold aim of measuring redshifts and characterizing the properties of the
Intra-Cluster Medium (ICM). Optical counterparts and spectroscopic or
photometric redshifts are obtained with a cross-correlation with NED.
Additional photometric redshifts are computed with a dedicated follow-up
program with the TNG and a cross-correlation with the SDSS. We also detect the
iron emission lines in 35% of the sample, and hence obtain a robust measure of
the X-ray redshift zX. We use zX whenever the optical redshift is not
available. Finally, for all the sources with measured redshift,
background-subtracted spectra are fitted with a mekal model. We perform
extensive spectral simulations to derive an empirical formula to account for
fitting bias. The bias-corrected values are then used to investigate the
scaling properties of the X-ray observables. Overall, we are able to
characterize the ICM of 46 sources. The sample is mostly constituted by
clusters with temperatures between 3 and 10 keV, plus 14 low-mass clusters and
groups with temperatures below 3 keV. The redshift distribution peaks around
z~0.25 and extends up to z~1, with 60% of the sample at 0.1<z<0.4. We derive
the Luminosity-Temperature relation for these 46 sources, finding good
agreement with previous studies. The quality of the SWXCS sample is comparable
to other samples available in the literature and obtained with much larger
X-ray telescopes. Our results have interesting implications for the design of
future X-ray survey telescopes, characterised by good-quality PSF over the
entire field of view and low background.Comment: 27 pages, 15 figures; minor typos corrected. To be published in A&A,
Volume 567, July 2014. Websites of the SWXCS project:
http://www.arcetri.astro.it/SWXCS/ and http://swxcs.ustc.edu.cn
Testing the gamma-ray burst variability/peak luminosity correlation on a Swift homogeneous sample
We test the gamma-ray burst correlation between temporal variability and peak
luminosity of the -ray profile on a homogeneous sample of 36 Swift/BAT
GRBs with firm redshift determination. This is the first time that this
correlation can be tested on a homogeneous data sample. The correlation is
confirmed, as long as the 6 GRBs with low luminosity (<5x10^{50} erg s^{-1} in
the rest-frame 100-1000 keV energy band) are ignored. We confirm that the
considerable scatter of the correlation already known is not due to the
combination of data from different instruments with different energy bands, but
it is intrinsic to the correlation itself. Thanks to the unprecedented
sensitivity of Swift/BAT, the variability/peak luminosity correlation is tested
on low-luminosity GRBs. Our results show that these GRBs are definite outliers.Comment: Accepted for Publication in MNRAS. 10 pages, 5 figures, 3 table
A complete sample of bright Swift Long Gamma Ray Bursts: testing the spectral-energy correlations
We use a nearly complete sample of Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) detected by the
Swift satellite to study the correlations between the spectral peak energy Ep
of the prompt emission, the isotropic energetics Eiso and the isotropic
luminosity Liso. This GRB sample is characterized by a high level of
completeness in redshift (90%). This allows us to probe in an unbiased way the
issue related to the physical origin of these correlations against selection
effects. We find that one burst, GRB 061021, is an outlier to the Ep-Eiso
correlation. Despite this case, we find strong Ep-Eiso and Ep-Liso correlations
for the bursts of the complete sample. Their slopes, normalisations and
dispersions are consistent with those found with the whole sample of bursts
with measured redshift and Ep. This means that the biases present in the total
sample commonly used to study these correlations do not affect their
properties. Finally, we also find no evolution with redshift of the Ep-Eiso and
Ep-Liso correlations.Comment: MNRAS in press, 9 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables. This version matches
the published version in MNRA
Optical and X-ray Rest-frame Light Curves of the BAT6 sample
We present the rest-frame light curves in the optical and X-ray bands of an
unbiased and complete sample of Swift long Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs), namely the
BAT6 sample. The unbiased BAT6 sample (consisting of 58 events) has the highest
level of completeness in redshift ( 95%), allowing us to compute the
rest-frame X-ray and optical light curves for 55 and 47 objects, respectively.
We compute the X-ray and optical luminosities accounting for any possible
source of absorption (Galactic and intrinsic) that could affect the observed
fluxes in these two bands. We compare the behaviour observed in the X-ray and
in the optical bands to assess the relative contribution of the emission during
the prompt and afterglow phases. We unarguably demonstrate that the GRBs
rest-frame optical luminosity distribution is not bimodal, being rather
clustered around the mean value Log(L) = 29.9 0.8 when estimated at
a rest frame time of 12 hr. This is in contrast with what found in previous
works and confirms that the GRB population has an intrinsic unimodal luminosity
distribution. For more than 70% of the events the rest-frame light curves in
the X-ray and optical bands have a different evolution, indicating distinct
emitting regions and/or mechanisms. The X-ray light curves normalised to the
GRB isotropic energy (E), provide evidence for X-ray emission still
powered by the prompt emission until late times ( hours after the burst
event). On the other hand, the same test performed for the E-normalised optical light curves shows that the optical emission is a
better proxy of the afterglow emission from early to late times.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A: 10 pages, 5 figures, 2 table
An enigmatic long-lasting gamma-ray burst not accompanied by a bright supernova
Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are short, intense flashes of soft gamma-rays coming
from the distant Universe. Long-duration GRBs (those lasting more than ~2 s)
are believed to originate from the deaths of massive stars, mainly on the basis
of a handful of solid associations between GRBs and supernovae. GRB 060614, one
of the closest GRBs discovered, consisted of a 5-s hard spike followed by
softer, brighter emission that lasted for ~100 s. Here we report deep optical
observations of GRB 060614 showing no emerging supernova with absolute visual
magnitude brighter than M_V = -13.7. Any supernova associated with GRB 060614
was therefore at least 100 times fainter, at optical wavelengths, than the
other supernovae associated with GRBs. This demonstrates that some long-lasting
GRBs can either be associated with a very faint supernova or produced by
different phenomena.Comment: 14 pages, 4 color figures. Final version accepted to Nature. Title
and author list updated. Includes supplementary material and one extra color
figure for presentation
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